More than 160,000 government records of gravestones provided to Union Civil War veterans who died between 1861-1903. Soldier data includes some or all of the following information about each soldier: name, rank, company, and regiment; place of burial, including the cemetery's name, and the city or town, county, and state in which it is located; grave number, if any; date of death; name of contractor who supplied the headstone and the date of the contract under which the stone was provided. Most of the burials occurred in private cemeteries, probably in the county of the soldier's last residence.

Includes a PDF file with a list of headstones. The national cemetery is located on the site of the Battle of New Orleans in 1815, next to Chalmette Battlefield in Louisiana. Established in May 1864 as a final resting place for Union soldiers who died in Louisiana during the Civil War, the 15,000 headstones in the cemetery mark the gravesites of veterans of the Spanish-American War, World Wars I and II, and the Vietnam War.

This site provides listing and head stone pictures of all confederate veterans buried in the 'Tennessee Confederate Soldiers Home' cemetery located in Hermitage, TN on the property of our past president Andrew Jackson's home the 'Hermitage'.

Arranged alphabetically by last name, the database includes information about the soldier's birth date, birthplace, condition/occupation at enlistment, date/place of enlistment, regiment/company, rank, date/place of discharge, post-military activities, and date of death/cause of death as reported by local historian Edward A. Miller, Jr. Wedding dates, names of wives, and names/birth dates of children are included when available. For many soldiers, details beyond the Notes column are available at the library.